News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Atlanta mother found dead in back of car
SUMMARY: Don Wilson last saw his daughter, Chanel, on July 13th when he planned to pick her up. She lived with her boyfriend, who has since been spotted in Atlanta without her. Wilson expressed concern as Chanel has not answered calls. He shared a chilling text he received from the boyfriend urging Chanel to call immediately, indicating something was wrong. Rumors have surfaced that the boyfriend may have harmed Chanel, with people claiming he shot her and placed her in the trunk of a car. Wilson is desperate for answers about his daughter’s whereabouts and safety.
Chanell Crosby’s death comes just two years after her teenage son, Jamiren Crosby, and her brother, Darrio “Polo” Giles, were both found shot and killed https://www.11alive.com/article/news/crime/mother-of-13-year-old-shot-killed-dekalb-2022-found-dead-in-atlanta/85-97635265-4b23-4461-88fc-82437bc586f8
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News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Trump's new tariffs give some countries a break, shares and US dollar sink
SUMMARY: U.S. President Donald Trump announced new tariff rates of up to 41% on imports from dozens of countries, effective August 7, eliciting mixed reactions. Some nations secured reduced rates through negotiations, while others expressed disappointment over missed deadlines. Canada faces a 35% tariff increase linked to drug trafficking concerns, while Switzerland’s tariff was raised to 39%. New Zealand and Australia continue talks amid higher tariffs, and Japan cautiously welcomed a 15% rate agreement. Taiwan hopes for further reductions from its 20% tariff. Cambodia, Thailand, Pakistan, and Bangladesh expressed relief over lowered tariffs and potential trade growth, though overall uncertainty remains.
The post Trump's new tariffs give some countries a break, shares and US dollar sink appeared first on www.wsav.com
News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Georgia’s youngest children deserve continuous Medicaid coverage
by Callan Wells, Georgia Recorder
August 1, 2025
Each year, parents must renew their children’s Medicaid — a burdensome process that often leads to children losing health care coverage for months at a time. Renewal letters get lost in the mail, phone calls are missed and never returned, or verification paperwork is submitted but never processed. The result is the same: children lose coverage, and families lose access to the care their kids urgently need.
For nearly 15 years, I’ve worked in Medicaid policy. Before joining GEEARS, I spent six years at a legal nonprofit serving Georgians with low incomes in the 154 counties outside of metro Atlanta. During that time, I answered dozens of calls each month from panicked parents and caregivers with the same heartbreaking concern: My child’s Medicaid was cut off even though we’re still eligible.
Some moments have stuck with me:
- A mother phoned from an emergency room. Her daughter had a broken leg, but the hospital refused to set it because her Medicaid had been terminated. They sent the child home with only pain medication.
- A grandmother reached out in distress. Her grandson’s Medicaid had been cut off, and he hadn’t had his ADHD medication in months. He’d been suspended from school, and his grades were plummeting.
- A mother, standing outside a surgery center, had just been told her daughter’s scheduled ear tube surgery was canceled. Medicaid was showing as inactive, even though they had submitted all the requested information.
In each case, the child was still eligible for coverage. These were not gaps in eligibility, but gaps in the system.
That’s why GEEARS: Georgia Early Education Alliance for Ready Students has long advocated for Georgia to adopt a Medicaid waiver that would ensure continuous coverage for children from birth through age three. The earliest years of life are critical for brain development, and stable access to care during this time helps lay the foundation for long-term health and learning. Routine pediatric visits, immunizations, developmental screenings, and early interventions — all are essential in the first three years of life.
Continuous coverage would both support children and families and also reduce the strain on state agencies by minimizing the paperwork caseworkers must review.
Yet on July 17th, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a memo announcing that it would no longer approve or renew Section 1115 waivers that provide continuous Medicaid eligibility for young children. This decision puts in jeopardy the waivers already approved in nine states and several other states’ waiver proposals.
Georgia never submitted such a waiver, though the legislatively mandated Comprehensive Health Coverage Commission recommended pursuing one for children through age six in its report last December. Had it been implemented, the policy could have stabilized care for the nearly 50% of babies whose births are covered by Medicaid.
Last year, that amounted to over 60,000 babies — 60,000 little ones who deserve uninterrupted access to health care during the most important years of their development. This waiver offered a straightforward solution. By shutting down this option, CMS has blocked a critical path to improving early childhood health outcomes in Georgia and across the country. It’s a deeply disappointing decision that ultimately harms our nation’s most precious assets: our children.
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Georgia Recorder is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Georgia Recorder maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jill Nolin for questions: info@georgiarecorder.com.
The post Georgia’s youngest children deserve continuous Medicaid coverage appeared first on georgiarecorder.com
Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Left-Leaning
This content advocates for expanded and continuous Medicaid coverage for children, highlighting the struggles faced by low-income families in maintaining healthcare access. It critiques a federal policy decision by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services that limits states’ ability to provide continuous eligibility, emphasizing the negative impact on vulnerable populations. The focus on government intervention to support social welfare aligns more closely with left-leaning perspectives on healthcare and social policy.
News from the South - Georgia News Feed
VA nurses rally against cuts to veteran healthcare services
SUMMARY: VA registered nurses and community members held a town hall in Augusta, Georgia, to protest federal actions affecting VA workers and veteran healthcare cuts. The National Nurses Organizing Committee emphasized that without sufficient staffing and funding, veterans’ care quality suffers. Irma Westmoreland, RN and VA Division Chair, stated the VA is being starved of financial and human resources, which effectively reduces services. Attendees urged Congress to fully fund the VA to ensure veterans receive proper care. Veteran and organizer Zee Cook encouraged veteran involvement in such events to help prevent cuts and highlight the commitment of VA workers to quality care.
The post VA nurses rally against cuts to veteran healthcare services appeared first on www.wjbf.com
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